The Fascist Who Built a Real-Life Dystopia
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- Опубліковано 3 сер 2024
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Today we explore the controversial life of Le Corbusier, and architect who fundementally changed the look of the world… for the better or the worse?
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- thanks for corrections on reinforced concrete, is is strong under COMPRESSION not tension. Also I got the pantheon bit slightly mixed up - but allow me
why did you change the title
to see if more people click it
Nice video, but I think you may be spewing a very general web here, in a few words - not all modern architecture is social housing, beauty is (as usual) relative and a lot of the study that goes into architecture nowadays deals more towards anthropology than to the idea of building something 'wicked sick
@@JimmyTheGiant love the videos
thanks Jim
“Very good, my roof is still leaking” such and underrated and savage comment by his mom, basically saying i don’t how fancy your building is if it doesn’t work
Good thing he didn't build boats.
the best architecture critic ever....
The Villa Savoye is infamous for its leaky roof as well. The family who commissioned it threatened to sue Le Corbusier after their child caught pneumonia. He ultimately paid for repairs out of his own pocket to placate them, and even then the building still had problems until a major restoration in the 80s.
For the record, Villa Savoye is considered one of Le Corbusier's masterpieces. Colour me unimpressed.
This also says a lot about Le Corbusier's need for approval if this is really what she says. He never got any from his parents, so he took it from pursuing the fame as an architect.
Still they haven't found a way to make flat roofs that doesn't leak unless piles of maintenance.
This ugly architecture damaged most Greek cities beyond repair after the 50’s. Unfortunately cities like Athens and Thessaloniki suffered the most. This mostly happened when people who owned land sold it in exchange for an apartment in some sort of contractual consideration (antiparochi in Greek) leading to the vast majority of the buildings looking like soviet style monstrosities.
That was my impression of Athens in the seventies. Totally ruined the classical parts.
It is frightening that we Turks are so similar with Greeks. Exact same thing has happened and still happening in Turkey. Now, classical parts of Istanbul are slums and the whole city was overtaken by these monstrosities. In my hometown, there are old Greek houses and old Turkish houses. Even in the same climate, same city, you can see what people prioritized while building their homes. Each has a character and tells a story about the people who built them. Not even two owned by same ethnicity, same religion, same socioeconomic status were the same. From their profession to number of their kids, effected their living space.
I so agree...I was enormously disappointed by Athens ( architecturally ) when I visited years ago
Want to see ugly modernism? View Corviale in Rome, Italy. "The longest building in Europe". The architect died shortly after its completion, legend from Rome says that he himself finished it out of remorse
I used to think council houses that were built post war in this country were ugly, maybe because i grew up in one, but now i see them as being beautiful and wished i still lived in one. What if we had more of them than the shit, we have on offer now?
"if you don't know about walls, I am not even sure how you got to this video, seems like there are a lot of things you need to learn in life" 🤣😂
I mean he's not wrong lol
Can some please explain roofs? Always wondered what those things were
@@Mr.PDF_File next vid dw
@@Mr.PDF_File Ask Clarke Gable and Ruth Tile? I would research for you more but I've got shingles.
@@JimmyTheGiant18:34 One utopia is another's dystopia. Vice versa. Dystopia is another's Utopia for another .
Like the matter of brith rate. Is overpopulation something autopsy or dystopia . Because overpopulation makes labor cheap. That's also the reason why Businessmen love immigration.Because it lowers the price of drinking wages But dystopia for the working class.
His mum is a savage 😂 “that’s great. My roof is still leaking”
she probably hated his work as much as the rest of us
Sadly she died 7 seconds after you wrote your comment; it would be appreciated if you replaced the "is" with a "was".
@@namogo_3532 it's a direct reference to the actual quotation of what she wrote, which is why it's in quotation marks to signify that it was HER remark. why does this need to be explained?
@jamesriver9267 Why are Americans so disrespectful to the deceased?
@@namogo_3532 i don't know what context your question is addressing here, because i don't know whom you're referring to as 'American', nor can i discern where any disrespect has been incurred. in all probability, i don't think you have much of a clue what you're asking about either, but i expect on the basis of what you've written so far you'd be the last person to realise that.
Finally, someone understands my deep hate for le corbusier as a French person.
yeah, but that guy was not a fascist
As a Dutchman, I share this hatred for any of his proteges.
Architecture that not even a mother could love.
@@apustajachileno he kinda was. He worked for the vichy government. The rest of the bauhaus and the Modern movement were socialists, but corbusier wasnt.
@@apustajachileno He was very sympathetic to fascism, though.
He probably knew his authoritarian "reform" ideas where only possible under dictators, and thus went and snuggled up to them.
Read his publicized letters - he still assumed Hitler to be " a great man who will modernize europe" in ´41. After 6 wars of agression had been started.
Im sorry to be that guy but i feel as a civil eng i have too..... concrete acts well in compression not tension, it acts really badly under tension hence why it needs to reinforced, the rebar takes up the tension forces
I came to the comments to say this and I'm not an engineer, just a run of the mill pipefitter.
@@tryaluck honestly dont trust us engineers trust the foreman they know more
@@tmmcgourty shut up.
Good comment. It’s hard to find anyone these days who treats the technical as neutral. Can I ask what causes concrete to spall. The reason I ask is I used to work in the mining industry. A lot of civils are used to set up fixed plant. Cone crushers create radial forces. The concrete spalled on all the vertical surfaces below the machine.
Don't be sorry, people like you are heroes the internet needs.
I mean in all honesty... walk down a street in London with Victorian era buildings and then look at these shapeless ugly towers going up everywhere... turns out aesthetics do matter.
The Dutch have recently built an entire city in the old 1800s fort style and would you believe it... despite all the criticism from the so called architecture "experts", turns out people really wanted to move into a place that actually looks and feels nice
Well, of course, they would. Why would you move into a place that costs money if you don't like it?
@@coolman3074 there are many reasons why people would do that lol. In London it's mainly necessity because all the jobs are there
@@TiGGowich But isnt it crazy expensive there?
If London looks like the photos then I never want to go there. It looks oppressive.
Le Corbusier's mom was right about the roof leaking, technically speaking he was a terrible architect even though he loved modern tecnology
I studied in a 1970s university and we had to walk around buckets on the floor.
same w/FLW. great architects are more designers than constructors.
I could do better
Most architects are crap, though: it's style over substance. They win awards for being edgy, then skip out and leave other people to live in their awful creations. Ditch your architect and hire a structural engineer.
@@gdutfulkbhh7537 hire an architect for aesthetic vision. have a good builder check their work for realism. structural engineers are (for the most part) for engineering commercial structures.
my favourite part of Birmingham when I go up there on the train is the old areas made out of bricks and more bricks. The new stuff, in an attempt to appear modern, already looks plastic, artificial and outdated.
Just a little comment to point that concrete needs to be under compression not tension. (6:25). Tension is pulling in opposite directions whereas compression is pushing in opposite directions.
Never let facts get in the way of a good Socialist narrative👍
@@LoremIpsum1970 whats socialist about it?
@@TVUA-cam-ow9xu Not been listening much to the last couple of videos, then. It's a shame they're not fact-checked.
@@LoremIpsum1970 ok but what does that have to do with concrete
@@marusdod3685 ...because the fact-checking in these videos isn't great...it's not hard to get the simple things correct.
"Very good, my roof is still leaking." Has to be the hottest burn delivered in the history of humanity.
This is why Dostoevsky hated the Inteligencia, a man I have shared the same faith with because of ''academics''...'' There are men there with whom no one would consent to live''
and I have committed no crime.
All men are ugly underneath. Its just weather you are open to it. Some men are able to rise above it.
he also hated the intelligentsia ;) ...so you're not consenting to live with my comment and me? :) Maybe one of them will come tell us we mean to say intellectuals rather than intelligentsia ... inteligencia no es mal ...?
"Very Good, my roof is still leaking."
THAT! That's what genius looks like.
I'm a Rollerblader and an Architect so it's been quite interesting over the past few years watching the progression of your videos..
Same here Man. I enjoy it all but do wish he occasionally did more sports videos
I'm not an architect but l have somehow nonetheless ended up spending a significant amount of my time around buildings.
Lol you enjoy someone who can't define fascism talking about it🫵😂
Same for me, though I didn't pay attention to the blading videos, I was surprised when it was released but blading or not, any subject is so well covered I would even watch a section on concrete.
3:00 fun fact about Nietzsche - he was vehemently opposed to fascism. However, he sister (who both manipulated and published a lot of his work, after his death) - was pro-fascist in a big way.
This is often why his work is misinterpreted and appropriated by fascists.
Nietzsche died before fascism even emerged as a movement, ret4rd.
Turns out Brits love a bit of Georgian architecture. Only problem is, no one can afford to live in any of it, so we all got stuck in Nelson Mandela House. Nevermind Rodders, this time next year we'll all be millionaires.
Georgian architecture doesn't have to be expensive to build. Most architectural features and ornamentation on beautiful buildings were mass-produced, and all of it can be poured concrete or similar inexpensive materials.
There are two separate points there, that are often conflated.
"Nice" architecture is more expensive to build than brutalism, yes, but not by the margins that you see differentiating the two in the marketplace.
A big part of the reason that "nice" buildings are more expensive than tower blocks is that people want to live in them and so people who can afford to pay more for them do so, pushing the price up. The challenge when building housing for the masses is to make it attractive enough that people _want_ to live there, without allowing the market to push those prices out of reach.
Before this thread gets sidetracked I'd just like to tell you what a beautiful comment this is. You really encapsulated British defeatist optimism and centuries of class structure in a single comment relevant to the video. Bravo.
@@mickey4125 Thanks mate. Nice to know someone got it.
See, we don't have that issue in the North West. Most of the land is protected reserve. 😅
We have homelessness tho.
I live in poundbury the town you referenced at the end of the video orchestrated and envisioned by King Charles. It’s beautiful & authentic (at least externally) They have done a remarkable job of building it, which is why we moved here. But even after three years of being here I don’t love it and I can’t describe why, it feels like living in a movie set, it doesn’t feel like a real place, it has a Truman show vibe but it’s so subtle it’s hard to pin point. We have friends and neighbours here but it’s always empty, there’s no history, it’s soulless. A truly remarkable architectural experiment, that has the same social anonymity of a brutalist tower block.
Can formulate what it is that is missing? I think this is an important subject. Personally, when I walk there with streetview, I think the ornaments are not really creative, I miss some joyful exuberance, weird details or deviations. The gardens are also not flamboyant enough. My feeling is dat the streets around Longmoor street feel more natural. Is that the oldest part? In that case it may just be a matter of time.
There is another village or estate on the edge of Newquay like that. When I saw a video about it, I wondered if it was a computer simulation as it looked flawless.
Thank you for your interesting letter about what it is like to live in Poundbury. Perhaps it will be time that will give your town a sense of place, of roots, of home. Bonne Chance! (I am French).
great comment. I feel an air of uncanniness throughout the city when I explore it virtually, but I chalk it up to it being a centralised project built in a very short time frame (30 or so years in urban timespans is nothing). Another commenter proposed that with the passage of time this can change, and I agree. As it is, it feels uncomfortably close to a misplaced Disneyland or a movie set, as there hasn't been enough time for the grime and the imperfections, the human touch of the thousands of people who live there to pile up, as it happens with every city.
@arccv It's like a New Town but better designed and using traditional principles. I did a project on New Towns at school long before Poundbury was built.
Le Corbusier was not French. He was from the French speaking part of Switzerland.
Hitler was not a German, but an Austrian. Napoleon was not French, he was Corsican. Alexander Hamilton was not from what was to become the United States, but from the Caribbean.
I love that the movement against modernist architecture seems to be growing, traditionally informed cities are starting to spring up again
Yet I have the feeling that at least half of that movement is a manifestation of the right wing culture wars against modernity itself. I've seen countless videos about the topic that felt less like a critique of bad architecture than an idealization of a past when "houses still were houses, men still men, and women still women". Modernist architecture is a perfect symbol for "everything that is wrong with the modern world", because it is very visible, intentionally puts function over form, and varies massively in aesthetic quality.
@@NeovanGothThis seems to me as one of the most annoying elements of right wing politics: they will recognize legitimate problems, and them propose the most innefective, delusional and batshit crazy solutions.
Loss of community? Blame it on feminism, when capitalism is main force driving us into atomization.
Ugly and hostile city design? Degeneracy, or something.
Economic struggle? This specific ethnic group must be the one to blame.
@@NeovanGoth - What you said, precisely. And critiques of “modernist” architectural styles are woefully misguided. What’s made buildings dull, ugly, and poorly-built is capitalism: financiers demanded that construction adopt every cost-saving measure which rolled out, like concrete as a material, pre-fab techniques, mass production, the phasing out of labor-intensive processes like stonework and decorative woodwork, and the phasing-in of outsourced production, using a single cost-cutting source for prefabricated modular components leading to identical buildings everywhere, and on and on and on … and the modernist architectural styles - which came AFTER capitalism demanded these measures - were all attempts to HUMANIZE these trends, to take mass-production and concrete and prefabrication and unadorned building components, and turn them into something a little warmer and more livable and human. And having grown up in Latin America, I can tell you we loved our brutalist buildings of the ‘50s, ‘60s, and ‘70s, and indeed most modernist trends and the international style, seeing them as liberating us from the stodgy old colonial styles reeking of monarchy and aristocracy. The revisionism going on today regarding all of the above is jaw-dropping.
He designed the most comfortable chair / chaise lounge ever, though, and my back is thankful for that.
Jimmy is the only one holding the secret for tensile concrete
what is more : tensile concrete found propping up the parthenon ... or was it sky hooks from the firmament ?
The super secret rebar.
@@carlost856 that would be reinforced concrete then ;)
The pantheon isn't the oldest building on earth
And it's not even close
@@luizarthurbrito was it Shaky's house
It's the oldest still in use
Also shows a picture of the Parthenon in Athens 😔
@@clearsight456Also no. For multiple reasons.
The Pantheon? Oldest building on Earth? Whilst showing the Parthenon on screen? The oldest building on earth is Gobekli Tepe (9500BCE). The Pantheon may the oldest building on earth still in use. And it's different from the Parthenon.
Exactly! He is in fact showing the Erechteion, next to the Parthenon on the Acropolis.
Karahan Tepe is older.
Is that a building or a monument, or does anyone even know?
@@AutismIsUnstoppableYou know your tepes!
@@billwillson890 Gobekli tepe is a temple
to be honest i think one people seem to ignore in the debate about modern architecture when we compare it to the past is the fact we only really preserved the best of what was built, most of us would have been in thrown up shacks or packed town houses
Like Kenya 😢
"Better conditions than before and massively improving the lives of many people"? But what you fail to mention that yes living conditions improved for a short while but they'd be a high price to pay because these brutalist high rises in the sky caused the break up of communities that had been there since before the war. The social impact it would have on people's mental health and the isolation felt by many residents is really sad. Concrete is very prone to water damage which would age these these buildings faster. Many of these high rises in London have been knocked down since and replaced with something more gentle with a better urban plan more focused on community.
Social housing was doing pretty well on the communal level before they filled them with drug-addicts gathered from the streets and 3rd world immigrants etc. at that point you have ghettoes created by politics rather than architects
@@koralgol777 They were already set-up to fail before they had even begun due to poor design and planning. Drug users and immigrants would just be the final nail in the coffin of an already failed vision that lacked social cohesion and compassion and an understanding of what people actually needed and not a perceived version of what they thought they wanted.
@@koralgol777This. For a lot of people, those ugly boxes significantly increased the standard of living, because most people simply didn't live in those nice old houses we admire so much nowadays. Central heating, proper insulation, an own bathroom with bathtub and hot water, and all of that for a decent price thanks to standardization and cheap construction. That was pretty revolutionary at the time.
@@koralgol777people needed drugs to deal with the horrible architecture.
@@billwillson890There’s always some dumb-ass making this type of unoriginal “joke” ….. this time it’s you. Congratulations. 😐
Even as a young teenager, I hated Modern architecture. I needed no one to tell me this. I could see the cheap, shoddy materials and how ugly and dehumanizing these concrete monstrosities were. As an adult, when reading about Western architecture since 1920, l found every book and magazine article praising this trash. Sometime in mid century, the modernists took over architectural schools and companies. Everything was made from concrete, steel, and glass. Everything was blank, oppressive and devoid of human feeling. Everything was depressing. Instead of feeling grand and welcoming, new buildings were cold and hostile. I can still remember the great open space of the new Worcester library covered in buckets because the roof leaked, the new side entry concrete stairs and landing of the Worcester Art Museum crumbling after 20 years, and the flat roof of Warwick Shoppers World in Rhode Island falling in under all that snow. All the old libraries in the county had front steps that were just fine, as were the front steps of the Worcester Art Museum, and as were the roofs of stores built before 1900. I will never understand how people were persuaded by conmen like Le Corbusier who convinced them that homes are machines for living. Who wants to live in a machine? Especially "machines" with wasted space, uncomfortable quarters, leaking roofs, leaking walls, cracking walls, no awnings to protect from the sun, weird and pointless shapes, ad nauseam! Lecorbu built the ugliest and most unholy Catholic churches anywhere. When the bishop of a diocese in southern France saw what was being built he refused to pay for anymore construction. Thank God Lecorbu is gone, but his minions are still legion.
It's almost like concrete, steel and glass do better against mold, earthquakes and fires😱😱😱 crazy Isn't it?
If the people who actually build things thought like you we'd all be homeless
There was me reading that thinking the Library in Worcester had a leaking roof and the shopping centre in Warwick had issues. Then the OP mentioned Rhode Island, US. Amazing how many times the same names pop up in the US.
@@ezpinutbutter3627 His other pounts still count. Apartment blocks are depressing. Europe has built better, more beautiful and just as affordable cities ex. Barcelona
@@k.umquat8604Pre-war European cities were absolutely terrible for most people. Berlin for example was crammed with densely packed and overcrowded tenements with no architectural value at all. Those houses were built as cheap as possible, because people were so poor they simply couldn't afford anything better. People nowadays probably can't even imagine how bad the situation was for the average worker's family. That was the status quo that modernists tried to improve by doing something completely new.
People say Le Corbusier was crazy for even suggesting to demolish parts of Paris to erect huge towers, but they completely overlook that the Paris we all know and love itself is the result of such a process.
Awesome video!! 🔥Great overview of Le Corbusier. He really did have a massive influence (unfortunately). I wasn't aware he couldn't even design a non-leaking roof for his own mother... we learn new things everyday!
quite frankly, ensuring the roof didn't leaked was the builder's job, not the architect's
Honorable mention to Erno Goldfinger! Most prominently remembered for designing residential tower blocks, and the man after whom Ian Fleming would name the James Bond villain. When Goldfinger considered taking legal action, Fleming threatened to rename the character 'Goldprick'. Eventually he decided not to sue and Fleming's publishers agreed gave him some free copies of the book
note: Comment basically plagiarised from wikipedia. At least I'm not a bot.
That's what a bot would say.... Exposed
Which of these photos shows a penis?
Concrete is extremely weak in tension. It is very strong in compression. What the steel.rods do is take the tension loads, leaving the compression loads to the concrete.
Also, steel and concrete expand at roughly the same rate when heated. This is why we don't see any aluminum reinforced concrete.
After WW2, they started removing the decorative ornaments on buildings here in Vienna. So they kept the buildings (if they were still inhabitable) but made them bland. There are movements to bring back the decorations to buildings.
Another thing is: the corporations planing housing today are doing it for profit, to sell the flats. If you look at the plans, most of them are not made for living. They are impractical shoeboxes and and eyesore from the outside.
As a neuroscientist, I am personally involved in research on these issues, and I want to congratulate you for the video! It's an excellent, balanced overview of the historical context and of the current situation. (Just a note, at 6.12 you say that "the Pantheon is the oldest building on Earth", which is not the case. Also, at that same time, you are showing the Erechteion of Athens)
I worked in the Toronto city hall.
It was the most useless building I have ever experienced.
I'd like to know more about this experience please 🙂
@@deedeechur It was a long time ago. I was a mail clerk at the time so I had the run of the building. The details are now very fuzzy. I just remember wandering from office to office thinking how dumb the design was.
Architects talk a great story but it often seems to be more about their egos than practicality.
Personally I much prefer the character of old cities and towns. Give me the almafi coast over Mississauga anytime.
my town of origin, Plymouth UK, has not yet recovered from Corbusier and is busy cutting down mature trees...
Im glad you're covering this topic. Not enough people are.
Maybe not enough care, can you blame them?
He had already made a sort of a part 1 on this topic with the decline of the
dystopian estates video. Interesting subject indeed.
@@cristianjuarez1086yes
Didn’t he start the video with a run down on the amount of coverage this topic is getting online?
These replies are immune to sarcasm
Ehh... It seems like he was more of an autocrat than a fascist. These gray commie blocks are mostly popular with authoritarian or socialist leaders. Mussolini and other fascists' often focused on more overly grandiose styles that tried to evoke an ancient legacy or a prosperous future.
you clearly never saw a "casa popolare" in italy hahaha
Guess you didn't hear the news, but everything that's bad is automatically right-wing and therefore fascist. Despite reality.
@@ChristianBoraginele case popolari fasciste fuori da Roma sono molto più belle e "case" rispetto ai blocchi di cemento fatti nella ricostruzione negli anni 50 e poi continuati negli anni 60 e 70
@@FrancescoBedini mah dipende dalla zona, però non è che sotto il fascismo era tutto monumentale, è questo che intendevo. Poi ci sarebbe da disquisire quanto del monumentalismo è direttamente discendente dal fascismo e quanto è una forma atavica in Italia. Cmq riassumendo, il bro del commento non sa na ciola. 🤣
I mean, it's not that crazy for Italy to have huge concrete structures and apartment blocks, considering that's what Rome and other Italian cities have had for thousands of years. Yes, lots of pretty ones came after they lost the recipe for Roman concrete and population densities and population growth (not to mention many, many, many, plagues, wars, and famines) couldn't justify the massive rows of apartment towers that Rome had, but it's also not alien to the peninsula.
Imagine thinking you’re a genius seeing liquid rock & keeping it as boring concrete instead of molding into something nice
That baffled me in school. The instructors tried to excuse it, I remember one saying the rough texture was because they couldn't find quality wood after WW2 to use for forms -- but for god's sake you can rub it out with a finish coat! Le C's work was purposely ugly and rough and unadorned and uncolored, and we are right to call it out for being such.
Ronchamp is the standout exception to this
Reinforced concrete + Parametric CAD modelling + Unleashed architects
= CRAZY BUILDING DESIGN.
+ Communist values
Most modern architecture is technical and economic - not aesthetic. It's not about life... it's about profit. Many modern buildings are manufactured, not created.
Yes ! The ideas of the architectural criminals such as the Smithson's seemed to coincide with the wheeze of 'System' building which promised cheapness to councils, and characters such as T Dan Smith and Poulson. Who can forget the triumph of Ronan point, and the discovery that the wonderful new construction method was pretty much jerry building on an enormous scale.
My city was turned into a soul-crushing dystopia by Daniel Libeskind, when are you making a video on him?
He called himself Danny Child-Lover and got away with it? Was he British or an American Republican.
In an episode of the 80s/90s TMNT cartoons when they wanted a character to be watching something boring on TV, it was a history of concrete.
I share the sentiment that this gulf separating architects' opinions and the general population's needs to be bridged asap. I don't think the solution, however, can be found in this insistence that whatever styles that were popular in the pre-modern era are the ones worth reproducing, but that's a larger dissatisfaction of mine in the anti-modernist movement. I don't believe that anti-modernist must necessarily mean traditionalist. I've been working as an architect only for a few years still, but I truly believe we're quickly approaching an inflection point in the method of designing and constructing buildings. Primarily due to the increasingly complex computerization of the process, compounded by breakthroughs in materials that could enable an explosion of "ornamental" elements that would be unheard of only a few decades ago. The kind of ornament that would give Gaudí and the Art Nouveau architects a run for their money. It would be a shame for these exciting new possibilities be lumped together with the drab Modernists and its children, and cast aside in favor of a rushed return to the past.
6:27 yeah mate, you got it completely backwards! Concrete is exceptionally strong in compression and remarkably weak in tension and torsion. That's why it has to be reinforced with steel ffs
Honestly, most people do not have PhDs in material science
@@hugepumpkin8094 Most people know stacking toy blocks, though. Say, which of these is under tension; the archway or the rope bridge? Exactly, no PhD needed
Adding a very important correction here. Concrete is not strong under tension. Steel is but concrete isn’t useful at all when you try to put it under a load that is pulling it apart. That’s why you have never seen anything constructed with concrete cables but the cables in a suspension bridge however will be steel instead where as the areas that are under compression because they are being pushed together will be constructed in concrete. Reinforced concrete can combine the benefits of both materials in places where you can experience both forces. One simple example is a concrete beam. Where the beam sags under load the top of the beam will be under compression as it is being pushed together, the bottom of the beam will be getting stretched apart as it’s under tension. Reinforced concrete will make the beam extremely strong in both compression and tension. Another example might be a column that is under compression but may also have to resist twisting forces that would introduce tension into the structure.
building new stuff that looks crap is bad, but the tearing down of old beauty to do it is far worse, which is what happens too much here.
Le Corbusier was a Swiss native born in La-Chaux-de-Fonds.
Oscar Niemeyer and Santiago Calatrava have been employed by him.
Several of his buildings in several countries have been listed as “World Heritage Site”.
People say “it’s a comfortable living” in his buildings like in Firminy-Vert/ Firminy / France.
Guy seeking the vindication of traditional architecture: “I’m not fascist, you are”
if there is something i can't help noticing, was the social conscience early modernist architects had. a good deal of what they did was getting rid of slums.
'very good, my roof is still leaking' ... *chef's kiss*, the perfect critique
As an Architecture student in the 1960's Le Corbusier was a god. I sought out his buildings in France. I still think he was a great designer of space, an artist, but a totalitarian. He had the typical French arrogance and at the time was loved by both intellectual and ruling class. Your lecture is brilliant...well done.
So he's to blame for Plymouth.
I can't remember who it was, but I know there was a comedian who described Plymouth as "a post-apocalyptic wind tunnel."
Pre fabricated buildings are really a scourge, thank you for covering this
Obscenely well made documentary and an interesting POV. Writing as an architect. I ve read his books and spent a lot of time around his works and ideas, starting with 14 (i am now 34). I am pretty certain he had no political position but humanism. He was never a member of a fascist party and vichy france was less worse than nazi france. This bit was constructed and ignored the situation during the war times. It wasnt a easy time for architects.
However, i did found your bits about his personality interesting, since i learned a lot about psychology in the meantime. He most likely was a narcissist, yearning for the approval of his parents, which he apparently never got, which in terms lead him to ever greater grandiosity, following the illusion of finally becoming loved, once that one big piece of work was admired.
For me personally, i am stepping away from the hero cult around the founding fathers of modernism. I want my buildings eventually to tell a story again.
I was born and raised in Chandigarh. AMA. I love it, it’s green, clean, organsied and one of the most prosperous and least congested cities in India.
Most people I know here don’t like other cities much.
I was scrolling down looking for comments on Chandigarh. I spent significant time there and I understand why people like it. Crazy that this video all seems to be a lead up to some nuanced commentary on Chandigarh city, its planning, construction and life there.. then he barely mentions it, only says its ugly and reinforces inequality, doesnt discuss any other aspects! Deserves its own video.. I thought at least a third of this would be a discussion of Chandigarh..
I’m an architect, and the way Le Corbusier is revered in the academy is just INSANE. Granted, he really marked a before and after in architecture and influenced entire generations and even the way we build, design and live today, but I feel he’s exaggeratedly overrated.
Brutalism is the negation of God erected into a form of architecture. It is soulless architecture for soulless people.
Same thing here in Finland with Alvar Aalto, who has been elevated into a godlike status. Our architects can still not shake off his shadow and just go in a different direction.
Kind of like Alvar Aalto in Finland, lots of beautiful buildings were demolished to make way to some pile of crap a kindergartener can draw, today is even worse.
Agreed, but architecture is a work of art, so neither hatred nor reverence for one particular style is undesirable
Same here. He was revered as a god by the hackiest profs I had, and his works like La Villa Savoye were presented as if they were literally perfect, transcendent beyond criticism by mere mortals such as us.
I myself admire the works of FLW quite a lot, but he was a flawed individual to say the least, and I would never claim that any of his buildings were perfect.
Back to Le Corbusier, I would argue he overall had an extremely negative impact on humanity. I could argue that he came up with the first public housing concepts that were ungodly flawed in thought and execution.
Ever noticed that most buildings seen as haunted have beautiful architecture
I should point out that most of the essential features of Georgian architecture (and most historic styles) were not originally intended to be decorative; they were the most expedient way to make a brick building support its own weight without wasting precious lumber. The horizontal arches over the doors and windows supported the bricks above with little or no wood reinforcement. Even the ubiquitous 6 panel door was a way to make a door that was strong enough and didn't swell itself shut, using less wood than it would take to make a solid slab door. Sure, some of the shapes were embellished for ornamental effects, but few ornamental features were just stuck on. In the 20th century, modernists developed a quasi-religious stance against ANY ornamentation, even that carved into elements that were essential, so what we got were a lot of sticks and flat panels with perfectly rectangular profiles fitted together as cheaply as possible. No wonder people got tired of it. In recent years, instead of correcting that misguided thinking, modernists have added stupid embellishments like odd angles, randomly spaced "IBM card" window openings and non-vertical walls (so much for "form follows function"). What we really need is a modern architecture based on modern building methods that doesn't bar carved or extruded embellishment of the shapes of the essential elements to make them look less rectangular and boring. Some of this sort of thing happened naturally in mid-20th century buildings as builders used moldings and hardware designed around older styles, presumably because it was cheap and available. But the international-style tyrants pushed most of that out and even insisted on flattening things like metal frames that had been fluted because the apparently ornate shapes optimized the use of metal. Some of my favorite 20th Century modern buildings benefited from accidental factors that the zealots of modernism would rather have exorcized .
If you want more buildings, you need to massively loosen regulation. Start with the 1947 Town & Planning Act.
Do you think you can build your way out of the housing crisis?
Really?
@@nickbarber2080 Yes, you can. Japan did it. Brazil did it (despite being one of the poorest countries in Americas, 80% of Brazilians own the houses they live in and have no mortgages pending). It is because in Japan and Brazil, once I own a plot of land, I can build whatever I want on it.
@@madjames1134 Their economies are not entirely predicated on constantly-rising house-prices,like ours is.
Just what I needed for my thesis, thank you for your content
A really great video, just 2 things you mentioned that I would correct:
1. Concrete can support compression easily, and with rebarb it can better support tension.
2. Decorations and traditional architecture isn't necessarily more expensive for developers. This is a common distractions used by Modernists. There have been plenty of architects showing that it's not necessarily true. The Aesthetic City channel provides great info on this as well.
Just giving a shout-out for using a This Country clip. Christ that show is hilarious, and at least outside of the UK criminally unknown despite still being so recognisable.
For some reason this reminded me a lot of Hitler's youth, except this Charles guy got accepted into architecture ranks and instead of becoming a dictator he created the world's most ugliest buildings. So in another reality we got an architect of war and a guy who redefined painting and made it really ugly.
Well, who would have thought that capitalists are open for ideas about squeezing money out of business.
@@Hizsoo How has this anything to do with what I said, weirdo?
I wonder - does 'brutalism' count as modernist architecture (what is shown here is practical rather than brutalist). Some brutalist buildings are absolutely awesome, although far from pretty.
Iirc; Brutalism and Bauhaus are different in goals from whatever the heck Le Corbusier was wanting. Bauhaus was trying to make Form = Function = Aesthetic (as in, try to make things Aesthetically pleasing WITHOUT having to slap stuff on it) with mixed results (though the rise of fascism ending Bauhaus School early before it can refine its ideas probably didn't help matters), and Brutalism is Function > Form & Aesthetic; which is ugly but atleast works.
Le Corbusier somehow got it in his head Function = Aesthetic > form; which honestly sounds just a few steps away from Italian Futurist (i.e. Proto Fascist Artist group whom ideals made even Mussolini go "hol' up!") building aesthetics ("traditionalism" without anything Aesthetically Traditionalist; making culture by destroying culture; etc.)
@@matthewutech5970 Thanks for responding - I have a clearer understanding now.
@@matthewutech5970
"Brutalism is Function > Form & Aesthetic"
I'd argue that Brutalism was all about form and aesthetic in disregard of base utilitarianism.
i saw that this was posted a few hours ago and i waited, waited so i can sit down and really enjoy it. and i enjoyed the anticipation of getting to watch it later. i dont have that with many crators, this is def in my top tier of channels.
Ornament is way more interesting than many architects think. A lot of ornament is in fact abstract art. Some of it is minimalist sculpture. But as entertainment it is also great. Ornament can tell stories, teach us about nature, can be energetic or static, it is an incredibly rich, complex language and still one that can be understood almost immediately by most people. This also means that the ornament of the past is not inaccessible to us to learn from. It draws us in, like a good novel or film, and then reveals more of its possibilities. Any architect can plunder the vaults with forgotten forms and use them or be inspired by them. Unfortunately, going half way between modernism and ornament usually gives bad results. This is because modernism is founded on a rejection of the richness and complexity of ornament. The inner resistance of architects makes them use irony, superficial references, or chaotic patterns, in order to use ornament while repressing its seductive, overwhelming power. Only when architects completely give in to their repressed desire for ornament can they learn to speak its language fluently.
If anything this video makes Le Corbusier sound like a proto Technocrat. Obsessed with cost cutting ad efficiency.
Pantheon, Parthenon, tension, compression… all the same, right?
The city where I work has these beautiful 1900s office buildings, apartments and hotels, yet I work in this horrible 1960s concrete block with an even more hideous multistory car park next to it (12 floors!). Each day I walk down the street admiring the old buldings - which are ornate in a non flashy way. When I get to where I work my heart sinks. It’s soulless. The building won several architecture awards and it’s definitely not the worst modern building in the city, but it’s not interesting to see or to work in.
These original modern architects and the communist/socialist and fascist regimes that approved of their principles somehow totally ignored that ordinary people are inspired by beauty and variety. Sure, people want houses they can afford, but no one has respect for a concrete block.
What is up with people blaming "Communism" for the crappy buildings that CAPITALISM forced on you?
"Look at all these crappy communist buildings here in London..."
LOL!
The villain was capitalism the whole time!
I want to be an architect and have wanted to be one for years, but watching these videos made me understand why I dislike modern buildings. Watching several of these videos has inspired me to want to revolutionise architecture to what it used to be. Make buildings that inspire, make people feel safe and happy, buildings create beautiful societies and pride in their local area. Buildings that are truely sustainable and beautiful. Thanm you for this video
Man, he should have stuck to traditional buildings.
I don't care what anyone says about his buildings, they are genuinely depressing and ugly.
Why would anyone want this cheap crap in their city?
I can see the buildings being cheaper to produce or something, but I don't think we should care about cost as much as we do.
For example, look at American schools built past 1970/1980, they look like old, sad military buildings.
There is no reason for anyone to like this style, let alone put it into place. It sucks and ruins all cities.
There's a reason the majority of people (aka the ones with actual good taste) like traditional city centers and not concrete shitboxes.
Are you saying people should care about the cost of living?
@@ezpinutbutter3627classical architecture doesn't need to be expensive at this day and age
@@jackyexexpensive is vague but it is by definition more expensive than modernist architecture
@@alcedob.5850 depends on how you calculate cost. Especially longterm.
Another banger as usual
"So that buildings can be more than just a machine for living"
Exactly how we need to think. Great and well informed video!
You’re best video yet. I live in Las Vegas so you could imagine how I feel! PS congratulations on your wedding. The pictures were epic.
Jimmy the best on the platform
(Just started seeing the video) There's also Oscar Niemeyer who turned Brasilia into a dystopian nightmare. He really did create some beautiful buildings, but the design is totalitarian in its very core: A city of huge boulevards that's inherently *non*-walkable because of the distances, with no adequate public transportation, only really navigable by car ... in the capital of a country with (then) a majority who couldn't even dream of owning one. The ministries are like huge Lego blocks placed on monstrouls lawns - meaning, if 100 people gather protesting in front of one they'll look like nothing; if a thousand does, still nothing; if a HUNDRED thousand does, it will still look like nothing, the politicians and civil servants can just look out the windows at see that it's nothing. (Sigh.)
"You can even see it in the Pantheon, the oldest building on earth."
Probably just missaid but a shit here we go again
Domino house 😂 that's like calling your kid Remus Lupin in a world where werewolves are a thing
I took an architecture course when I was in high school and while it was super complex and you needed to be very detail oriented, it was also super cool. I even got to design a theoretical museum
As an architect in the socialist Bauhaus approved International Style, Le Corbusier was hardly a fascist. Mussolini and Hitler favoured neo- grecian/ roman, see Speers blueprints for Germania. Fascists prefer grandeur to utilitarian
He did write a book called “A new French fascism”, though. As an architect, I studied him thoroughly while in uni.
Apparently he wasn't a very good fascist.
I've visited a couple of Le Corbusiers buildings, and to be fair they were rather lovely and well designed. The concrete exteriors actually look pretty great in Marseille, where I visted Le Corbusier's unite d'habitation, the bright sun making them look warm and bringing out the texture of the concrete. Concrete doesn't look so great in Bradford though! ( where I come from!)
A lot of the problem with bad modern architecture is trying to make it too cheap, and then not maintaining it properly. The Barbican is a great example of fantastic modern architecture that still looks great while making full use of the properties of reinforced concrete to allow for large spans and light airy interiors uncluttered by supporting walls.
The trouble is the Barbican wasn't cheap to build or maintain, but I would argue it's worth the money to build decent housing. It effects your daily life and is a relatively small amount of money extra to build good housing rather than the terrible crap that's being erected in the UK now. Most of the cost of a house is in the land cost and planning to allow a house to be built.
We really need to drastically raise our standards, as good housing is a boon for everyone living there in both cofort and money (we could insulate our buildings so much better in the UK, it isn't rocket surgery). Go to somewhere like Germany and look at the quality of their windows, it really is shocking what builders get away with in the UK. (actually it's not the builders, it's the developers and architects who are at fault, the builder is just building what they've been instructed to build)
I‘m not really a fan of this whole “we need to go back to building beautiful buildings“ movement but you do make a compelling argument! What fascinates me about Bauhaus architecture is how it often looks so sensible at the drawing board. The people who actually lived in those buildings however always changed the design as far as possible, making it their own. Some aspects even turned out being wholly unsuitable and in fact driven by ideology rather that science. Le Corbusier never having received formal training probably speaks for itself here.
Still wouldn‘t want to go back to a pseudo-victorian style of architecture because as a society we have indeed moved on.
If people made the buildings their own, then the buildings were a success; were good.
"His architecture teacher in the Art School was architect René Chapallaz"
"for fourteen months between 1908 and 1910 he worked as a draftsman in the office of the architect Auguste Perret"
"worked for four months in the office Peter Behrens, where Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius were also working and learning"
Sorry, what was he lacking?
If it is not currently possible to get a permission slip to be an architect based on an apprenticeship then that is a much more recent change than Corb's "lack of formal training".
The "Habitation Unit" that Le Corbusier made is considered the first building on the "brutalist" architecture style, which I personally love. Now, the style evolved more from it and buildings instead explored bold and interesting geometry as ornament, with monumental spaces becoming it's staple.
I can understand that some people hate it, but for me ornamented buildings tire me after some time due sense overload, and a "machine to live" feels more comforting and calm. For my fellow music nerds, it's like the difference between a "wall of sound" song produced by Phil Spector against something out of the "music for airports" albums from Brian Eno.
Le Corbusier was a fucking monster in pretty much every way imaginable. The damage he and his legacy have done to our world and our psychological well-being is difficult to overstate.
Yours is definitely one of the best UA-cam channels by a long way. There's a lot of addictive mindless crap on YT and I watch too much of it 😢 but your videos are a very different experience. Thanks Jimmy the Giant.
there is nothing more beautiful to me than a building perfectly engineered FOR its purpose. so brutalist architecture is perfection. it always has baffled me that people assume that because THEY like gaudy decorations its not something to be ashamed of.
i like how jimmy's videos still see the world through a parkour lens, i'm sure he wouldn't care as much about brutalist architecture if it weren't for barbicain and thamesmead's influence on parkour.
Haha for sure man, parkour shaped my whole life - I hope I can get back to training one day
You mean more people made it out of the Barbican? I almost gave up hope when I was there.
@@JimmyTheGiant Hey dude your doin meta'Parkour urbexring urban myths & overcoming obstacles to understanding important things that only 3D perspective of rooftops, kick offs & a literal visceral {bloody bails, shins & knees} connection to the built environment.
Your turning into a bloody good journalist {even got s sense of humour}
@@garrenosborne9623 hell yeah he is he's great
@@JimmyTheGiant ay man keep active with badminton maybe lift some weights and your ankle will be good enough to train at some point i'm sure.
> Erechtheion, Greece pictured when talking about the Pantheon, Rome...
>Concrete: Compression good, Tension bad, an arch is in compression, the rebar is there to handle the Tension... Concrete got worse with Eugène Freyssinet's invention of pre-stressed concrete...thinner concrete that can go bang! Inspiration: Metropolis (1927)
> Slums to highrise...what were the Garden Cities for? And places like New Addington?
> No toffs in WWI? Who do you think the Trinity College Tiddlywinkers were? I guess that means all Knights were working class...
Came here for this :)
He showed the Erechtheion/Erechtheum, not the Parthenon. If you're going to correct someone, at least be correct yourself.
@@yuyutubee8435 Congratulations. Tbh I didn't think anyone would notice, most people think they're one of the same. Though neither use any concrete...
He gave india India one of their best city chandigarh! ❤
Le corbusier a Fascist? What is this, opposite land? The man was as left as it gets.
Fascism itself isn't right wing, Nazism was
Corbusier was a Fascist sympathizer, and Fascism was indeed a Far-Left, socialist ideology.
@@edwardbrown3721 : Both Fascism and National Socialism were socialist Far-Left ideologies. They had nothing to do with Right wing of any kind.
No, fascism has always been tied to corporatism and traditionalism. It's not Left. The Nazi's had "socialist" in their name, but their socialist policies mostly extended to funding their war machine, not to material gains for labor. Autocracy can happen with any form of economic policy, but Fascism is a right wing idea.
@@andrewdraper6586 _"It's not Left. "_
By definition it is Left, Far-Left in fact.
Cool video excluding the “concrete good in tension” faux pas but they have manufactured this idea that people who dislike copy and paste ornamentation dislike decoration as a whole. Most just want the decoration to be considered and designed as part of the building.
This is really great man. The pacing and the editing is so good.
Like top fucking tier perfect UA-cam video moment.
"All I really need to know I learned in kindergarten" - that's quite accurate if you consider traditional folktales for kids. The Emperor's New Clothes tried to "vaccinate" us against people like that: "If you don't like my work you're stupid" shouldn't be effective on adults. We should retorn periodically to kindergarten.
I appreciate that you actually understand and relate the important mechanism in TENC.
Not sure about constructing new faux Edwardian buildings. It just feels a bit like China's themed European towns but maybe that won't matter if people love these places. It would be interesting to explore new possible alternatives that people could still enjoy being in.
Have you seen the King's 'planned' town? Awful.
@@LoremIpsum1970 Yeah, did they build that on the cheap? Still, some ironic street art and a couple of modifications would fix it right up. I have the feeling that the locals already like it though.
@@LoremIpsum1970 What's awful about it?
Well done Jimmy. I've been thinking a lot about this as well. I've picked up the reproductions of the big books on ornamentation form the 19th Century by Racinet and Owen Jones (not the recent political figure). Interestingly because of the whole modernists dilemma there aren't updated versions. I believe I'm the guy who first put Adolf Loos and Ornament and crime in your ears. There is a lot to explore in the Italian Futurist manifestos as well. I've been following some of these other channels that seem to be popping up critiquing Modernist and Postmodern architecture. And I've been following with interest your detective story from the councils to the Brutalist buildings and the anonymous shite that we are being asked to live in. I live in Tbilisi Georgia. The old Soviet architecture seems better than the soulless post independence blocks that keep getting put up.
I have an idea, I'll send you an email to reinforce it. But what would say to a kind of online symposium inviting several of the people from various channels that have been doing this. You have the biggest channel. So hosting it on yours might be a good option. Anyway I'm putting this in your ears now. I'll come back soon with an actual proposal. I think this movement is growing. We need our ornamentation and texture back. Thanks for the good work you've been doing.
You can tell you put a lot of effort into this great video . Thanks !
Thank you, I learnt so much !
I despise brutlaist architecture
edit: wow this video's title has changed so many times
Brasilia his greatest disaster. Also those post war council estates were absolute social disasters, that improved the lives of nobody. Thankfully most of them have been pulled down.
Can you pull down New Addington, please?
You might be thinking of Oscar Niemeyer, the main developer of Brasilia.
Mostly because everything is spaced out. There's plenty of greenery in the city which is always a plus.
Brasilia is terrible because it is car centric, not because of the architecture. It actually fits quite well there.
I’d say the design was only part of the problem for council housing. An equally important reason was when the labour government at the time decided to house deadbeats alongside the decent hard working, working class. That ended dragging it down for everyone.
You see, you can not expect art and affordable homes to go together.
I love how trying to make housing affordable and available to everyone ended up making housing ugly as sin, creatively bankrupt and somehow also so much more expensive even if 2 people per household work fulltime theyll never be able to afford one.
Or if they do theyll pay it off for 70years.
And its just ugly ontop so the construction company can have 1% higher margins.
Amazing.
No no no no no the steel is in tension which exerts compression on the concrete. The concrete is in compression.
i love modern art and classical music and scupltures, but even i don't want my town or city to look brutalist
brutalism was a different late mooernist movement developed by the smithson couple
@@FilipSornat rip wrong term then 💀
Still hate the guy's style though /lh